About two weeks ago, while sitting on the front porch
cleaning my boots, I heard the unmistakable buzz of a female Pipe Organ Mud
Dauber, Trypoxylon politum, sealing up a brood chamber inside her nest. This
species of wasp uses mud to construct a long tube which it divides into
individual compartments, each of which will be loaded with a collection of
venom paralyzed spiders to be used as a food source for a developing wasp
larva. I looked over and saw that the female wasp was in the process of sealing
off the bottom chamber of a long tube nest.
I was not the only one interested in this activity. A female
Tachinid fly was stalking around the entrance to the nest, waiting for an
opportunity to sneak in and leave one or two of its eggs inside the brood
chamber. Gaining access was not an easy process. While the female wasp was away
gathering more mud, the male wasp moved in to guard the nest entrance.
Eventually, as the female wasp put the finishing touches on
the bottom seal of the brood chamber, the male wasp moved away and allowed the fly to slip in.
The video above shows the female wasp bringing in mud to
seal the last brood chamber, the male wasp performing its guard duty and
attending to the female, and the fly skirting around the entrance to the nest
and finally seizing its opportunity to enter. A longer version of this video
can be seen on YouTube by clicking HERE.
Yesterday I spotted this fly resting on the outside of the tube
nest. It was obviously freshly emerged and its appearance was marred only by a
few crumbs of dry soil matching the color of the nest.
Not far away from the fly was the hole through which it had
escaped the wasp brood chamber.
I scraped a bit of soil away from the site of the exit hole
and discovered the empty pupal case left behind by the fly.
Further excavation revealed what was left of several spider
carcasses and what looked to be additional fly pupae.
Here’s what was inside the chamber. There was evidence of three
Tachinid fly pupae. The larvae had feasted
on the spiders, leaving only empty husks behind.
Two pupae were intact, containing flies that would probably
soon be emerging. A single empty case was left by the fly I had observed
earlier.
Pipe Organ Mud Daubers frequently construct their nests on
my porch. Some of the holes in this nest from last season were probably made by
emerging wasps, but I know that several were made by foraging woodpeckers.
Closer examination of the old nest reveals smaller holes
that are just the right size for an emerging fly. I imagine this fly and wasp a
game is a common occurrence on my front porch.
thank you so much for the informative post. This is another thing that I know nothing about until I read your very informative post. You are very observant and also a bit of a detective in researching things, like what was left behind by the fly. Very informative and entertaining, a hard thing to pull off.
ReplyDeleteSuper cool. Thanks for taking time to document!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Jennifer.
DeleteHi Steve, great post! I didn't even realize that tachinid flies parasitized mud dauber wasps. Nice video too of the male wasp guarding the nest. Although it looks like the fly goes in with the female. Interesting! Do you know if it's the fly larva that chews a hole through the mud so that when it emerges as an adult it has a way to escape the mud nest?
ReplyDeleteHi, Laura. The hole wasn't present until after the fly emerged, so I am assuming that the adult manages its own escape.
DeleteThis was amazing, thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Rebecca. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Delete